Year 10
Gustar (singular and plural): Giving opinions about school subjects
Year 10
Gustar (singular and plural): Giving opinions about school subjects
These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.
Switch to our new teaching resources now - designed by teachers and leading subject experts, and tested in classrooms.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- In this lesson, we will learn how to use the verb 'gustar' and other similar verbs to give opinions about school subjects.
- Purpose of language use. Talk about subjects and teachers
- Grammar. Present tense: GUSTAR-type verbs (me, te, le) + infinitiv. PREFERI. Comparatives, superlatives
Licence
This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.
Loading...
Some of our videos, including non-English language videos, do not have captions.
13 Questions
Q1.
Opinions in Spanish can be plural
False
True - most opinions are plural.
Q2.
How does 'me' translate into English when using an opinion?
Me
My
Q3.
'El inglés' is spelled with an 's' at the end, which makes it plural.
It depends, it can be both depending on the sentence.
True
Q4.
Maths, science and business studies are all plural subjects.
Maths and business studies are plural subjects, but not science.
The only plural subject is business studies.
Q5.
All opinions begin with 'me, te or le'.
Yes - all opinions have to begin with 'me, te or le'.
Yes - but it's important to be aware of some small exceptions.
The next 7 questions cover some very common words you will need in Spanish in KS4. These words are very important because they give away or subtly change the meaning of a sentence. Select the correct meaning for each word. When you get your score, check your answers and write down any of the words that you didn't know.
Q7.
que
and
but
Q8.
eso
these
this
Q9.
día
diary
dire
Q10.
cosa
cause
house
Q11.
nuevo
nice
nine
Q12.
único
unified
united
Q13.
viejo
villager
young